Galleons and Globalization: California Mission Arts and the Pacific
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ABOUT USF DESTINATIONS GATEWAYS SEARCH Information Sign up to receive our email newsletter with Current Exhibition updates on exhibitions Exhibition Calendar and events: Rooftop Sculpture NEWSLETTER Terrace Previous Shows Gallery Map (pdf) August 20 – December 17, 2010 In conjunction with Legacies of the Book: Early Missionary Printing in Asia & the Americas in the Donohue Rare Book Room. The University of San Francisco commemorates the 400th anniversary of the death of Matteo Ricci, Jesuit pioneer of inculturation, with two exhibitions that bring together missionary and secular art, artifacts, and books from the Spanish Pacific empire. The exhibition Teacher's Guide to the explores the lively commerce in iconography, Exhibition materials, and ideas that shaped California’s rich mission arts. Galleons & Globalization “Galleons & Globalization” explores the lively commerce in iconography, materials, and ideas that shaped California’s rich mission arts, presenting over 125 objects dating from the 16th and 19th centuries that exemplify the rich cultural interchange among missions in the Philippines, Macau, China, Japan, Mexico, Peru, Paraguay, Baja and Alta California. The Acapulco-Manila Galleons plied the Pacific trade routes from 1565 to 1815, exchanging American silver for Asian porcelains, silks, spices, and luxury goods, providing a steady trans-Pacific trade in books, artworks, liturgical and practical objects, as well as food stuffs. The exhibition opens with artifacts from four of these sunken ships: the wreck of Galleon San Diego outside Manila Harbor (1600) and three North American sites (the doomed San Agustin that broke up at Point Reyes in 1595, the mysterious Oregon “Wax Ship,” and the Baja California San Felipe site that is still being excavated.) The beauty, diversity, and richness of the artifacts is unexpected, even startling. Seen together these objects— obscure treasures collected from sunken ships and prized selections from international museums, California’s missions, and private collections—lead to surprising cross-cultural discoveries: Jesuit images from India and porcelain from Macau; Christian pottery from China and Japan; a Chinese Guadalupe from Carmel; a Risen Christ from the Paraguayan reductions recently discovered at Santa Barbara; a Chumash basket woven with the Spanish imperial coat of arms at Ventura; vestments and mantones de manila (Chinese silk shawls); Philippine ivories; a mission bell cast in Lima; ships’ carvings from Santa Barbara and San Antonio; and a Russian samovar from San Gabriel. All of these demonstrate the beginnings of globalization that occurred in the Spanish Pacific from the late 16th through early 19th centuries and contributed to the beauty and richness of California Mission arts. The exhibit is complemented by an extensive display of very early imprints from Japan, China, the Philippines, Mexico, and Peru in the USF Donohue Rare Book Room and a scholarly conference “Legacies of the Book: Early Missionary Printing in Asia and the Americas” (September 24-26, 2010). Opening Celebration Thursday, September 2, 3-5 p.m. Thacher Gallery at USF Scholarly Conference Friday to Sunday, September 24-26, 2010 Fromm Hall at USF Related Off-Site Presentations Dr. Corazon Alvina, former director of the National Museum of the Philippines, and Rene Javellana, SJ, Professor of Art, Ateneo de Manila University Thursday, September 30, 6 p.m., $5 Asian Art Museum, 200 Larkin Street. Related Public Events Related Public Events are listed at the bottom of this page. Curators The exhibit is curated by Thomas Lucas S.J., PhD, USF’s first University Professor of Art and Architecture and director of the Thacher Gallery, with important contributions from Antoni Ucerler S.J., (Oxford University), Edward Von der Porten, and the curators of Alta California’s missions. Major Sponsors Ambassador Alfonso T. Yuchengco, Asian Art Museum, Thomas and Patricia Klitgaard, Andrea and David Hayes, and the University of San Francisco’s Center for the Pacific Rim, Jesuit Foundation, Loyola House Jesuit Community, Ricci Institute, Saint Ignatius Institute, and Yuchengco Program in Philippine Studies. Lending Institutions and Individuals Araneta Family; Austrian National Library; California State Library, Sutro Branch; California States Parks Service, Sonoma; Campion Hall, Oxford University; Cynthia Bondoc; de Saisset Museum, Santa Clara University; Eugene Florendo; Andrew Galvan; Leovino Garcia; The Getty Research Institute; Jeremy Hass; INAM, Baja California; La Purisima State Park; Jesuit Community, Macau; Lauinger Library, Georgetown University; Gordon Miller; Mission Dolores, San Francisco; Mission San António, Jolon; Mission San Carlos, Carmel; Mission Santa Clara; Mission San Diego; Mission San Fernando Rey, San Fernando; Mission San Francisco Solano, Sonoma; Mission San Gabriel; Mission San Juan Bautista; Mission San Luis Rey, Oceanside; Mission Santa Barbara; Mission Santa Inés, Solvang; Phoebe Apperson Hearst Museum of Anthropology, University of California at Berkeley; Presidio Chapel, San Carlos Cathedral, Monterey; National Parks Service, Point Reyes; National Museum of the Philippines, Manila; Our Lady of Sorrows Parish, Santa Barbara; San Agustín Museum, Philippines; Santa Casa de Misericordia, Macau; San Carlos Cathedral, Monterey; Society of California Pioneers; Sophia University, Japan; Tillamook County Pioneer Museum; USF Donohue Rare Book Room; USF Jesuit Community; USF Ricci Institute for Chinese-Western Cultural History; USF Collection; Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Collection, The University of Texas at Austin; Saryl and Edward Von der Porten; Woodstock Theological Center, Georgetown University. Teacher's Guide In conjunction with “Galleons and Globalization,” the gallery is offering a Teacher’s Guide (pdf) and coordinated tours designed as a supplement for the fourth-grade Mission Projects. Focusing on the Acapulco-Manila galleon trade route, “Galleons and Globalization” reveals the early global influences on California history and the mission aesthetic. The exhibit includes artifacts from a dozen missions, including Spanish ship heads, Chinese porcelains and silk, Mexican silver, Philippine ivories, and Chumash baskets with European motifs. The Teacher’s Guide includes two detailed lesson plans, handouts, and a scripted tour. The introductory lesson draws connections between the diversity in students’ communities and the early interactions between Pacific Rim cultures brought on by the Acapulco-Manila trade route. The concluding lesson guides students through writing a creative narrative of an artifact, chronicling its journey from origin to California. The tour and its accompanying gallery activities focus on trade routes, mission life, and the interaction between European settlers and Native American peoples. Written and reviewed by experienced fourth grade teachers, the “Galleons and Globalization” Teacher’s Guide is a wonderful resource that creates historical context for the exhibit while addressing California state standards. A visit to the gallery allows students to see historical objects first-hand in order to discuss and interpret artifacts, as well as take part in a unique learning experience that nurtures curiosity. The University and the Thacher Gallery invite classes of all ages to interact within the gallery setting. We are happy to assist with coordinating field trips. If interested, please contact Glori Simmons, Associate Director, Thacher Gallery at (415) 422-5178 or by email: [email protected] . Teacher's Guide Exhibition Text Panels Recent Press for the Exhibition artpractical.com America: The National Catholic Weekly “Galleons and Globalization: California In All Things: “Galleons and Mission Arts and the Pacific Rim” Globalization” 2.1 Shotgun! By John Colman By John Zarobell September 10, 2010 San Francisco Chronicle Catholic San Francisco ‘Galleons & Globalization' show at USF USF exhibit showcases Spanish, Asian By Julian Guthrie, Chronicle Staff Writer influence on Mission arts September 2, 2010 By Valerie Schmalz September 15th, 2010 San Francisco Examiner Thomas Lucas is getting ready for gallery's 12th season By Mike Aldax August 10, 2010 Related Public Events Tuesday, September 7, 5:30 p.m. USF Lone Mountain 100 Public Lecture with Rev. M. Antoni J. Ucerler, SJ Sponsor: Ricci Institute Tuesday, September 14, 5:30 p.m. Fromm Hall Public Lecture with Fr. Thomas Lucas SJ w/tour Sponsor: Ricci Institute Friday, October 1, 5 & 5:30 p.m. Thacher Gallery at USF Two Pre-Concert Guided Tours of “Galleons” in conjunction with Sampung Taon! A Gala Celebration of ten years of the Maria Elena Yuchengco Philippine Studies Program Sunday, October 3, 3:30-5:00 p.m. Thacher Gallery / Asian Art Museum Filipino American History Celebration w/ the Asian Art Museum. Gallery- sponsored shuttle buses traveling to/from AAM & docent-guided tours; co- sponsored by USF Center for the Pacific Rim and Ambassador Alfonso T. Yuchengco Tuesday, October 19, 12 Noon to 1 p.m. Donohue Rare Book Room 3rd Floor, Gleeson Library | Geschke Center Curator and Gallery Director, Thomas Lucas, SJ will talk about the many artifacts presented in “Galleons and Globalization: California Mission Arts and the Pacific Rim” and the ways they reveal the early global influence of the Acapulco-Manila galleon trade route on California history and the mission aesthetic. Refreshments provided. Co-sponsored by the Donohue Rare Book Room. Saturday, October 23, 9:30 a.m. Fall Fest at USF Tour for Alumni with Cur. and Dir., Tom Lucas, SJ Sponsor: Fall Fest Friday, December 17 EXHIBITION CLOSES University of San Francisco Educating Minds and Hearts to Change the World 2130 Fulton Street Directions Contact USF Web Feedback About This Site San Francisco, CA 94117-1080 (415) 422-5555 .